Two Northwestern College Students To Attend Harvard Computing Competition

Orange City, Iowa — Two computer science majors from Northwestern College will compete at HackHarvard 2024, a computer coding event, in Cambridge, Massachusetts this weekend.

Northwestern officials tell us Mari Hirota and Pratik Paudel have been accepted as two of more than 1,000 competitors in this competition, to be held on the campus of Harvard University.

Paudel explains that at HackHarvard, “Participants develop important skills, learn new technologies, and work together, all while tackling a specific problem in a short time, usually 24 to 48 hours.”

This is the ninth year of the event, in which college students from 22 countries and 284 universities have participated. Both Northwestern participants are international students: Hirota is from Japan; Paudel is from Nepal.

Hirota says the competition is about “building an impactful project in a short amount of time with a team. It is not just about winning the ‘hackathon’ but the opportunity to build connections with different students across the nation, improve our technical skills in a short amount of time, and get to know more about companies that sponsor the event.”

About the term “hacking,” Paudel explains, “Hacking in events like hackathons is about using technology in creative ways to solve problems. It’s like how we use the word ‘hack’ to describe clever solutions in everyday life. At this event, hacking means creating and building, not breaking or damaging systems.”

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